<p>Casper Ruud's clay-court season has hit an early roadblock. On Thursday, the Norwegian was forced to retire from his round-of-16 match against <a href="/en/joueurs/felix-auger-aliassime">Felix Auger-Aliassime</a> at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters, trailing 5-7, 2-2 when he could no longer continue.</p>
<p>The first set had been a grueling affair, with both players locked in lengthy baseline exchanges. But the physical toll quickly became apparent. At the start of the second set, <a href="/en/joueurs/casper-ruud">Casper Ruud</a> began showing signs of discomfort in his leg, and at 1-1 he called for a medical timeout.</p>
<p>The trainer worked on Ruud's leg for several minutes before the ninth-ranked player attempted to resume. He fought through two more games before accepting the inevitable — his movement on the Monte-Carlo clay had deserted him.</p>
<p>"It came out of the blue," Auger-Aliassime revealed after the match, recounting what Ruud had told him at the net. "It happened suddenly at the start of the second. I think it's just bad luck. I hope he recovers quickly because the clay season is just beginning."</p>
<p>The timing could hardly be worse for the two-time Roland-Garros finalist. Monte-Carlo was supposed to be the launchpad for his clay swing through Madrid, Rome, and Paris — the stretch of the season where Ruud has historically produced his best results. That plan now hangs in the balance.</p>
<p>This is not an isolated incident either. Ruud suffered multiple mid-match retirements late in 2025, raising questions about his physical durability over a demanding tour schedule. His team has not yet commented on the specific nature of the injury or provided a timeline for his return.</p>
<p><a href="/en/joueurs/felix-auger-aliassime">Felix Auger-Aliassime</a>, seeded sixth in Monte-Carlo, now faces world number two <a href="/en/joueurs/jannik-sinner">Jannik Sinner</a> in the quarterfinals. The Canadian was leading when the retirement occurred, but he would undoubtedly have preferred to earn his passage in full.</p>
<p>Ruud's withdrawal deprives the tournament of one of its most natural clay-court competitors and raises broader questions about the toll the modern calendar takes on player fitness.</p>



